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Reading Visual Art: 239 Bread as food

In the first of these two articles looking at bread in visual art, I considered it as a symbol of life, predominantly following the Christian tradition set by the Last Supper. Here I consider bread in its role as food, the staple of most Europeans.

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Jean-François Raffaëlli (1850-1924), Man with Two Loaves of Bread (1879), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Man with Two Loaves of Bread (1879) is one of Jean-François Raffaëlli’s social realist paintings. This man’s bowed head and furtive look make you wonder just how he had acquired those loaves.

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Luc-Olivier Merson (1846–1920), The Wolf of Agubbio (1877), oil on canvas, 88 x 133 cm, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille, Lille, France. Wikimedia Commons.

Luc-Olivier Merson’s wonderful painting of the Franciscan legend of The Wolf of Agubbio from 1877 is set in the town’s central piazza on a bitter winter’s day. The large wolf of the legend has a prominent halo and stands at the door of the butcher’s shop, from where the butcher is handing it a piece of meat. A young girl smiles open-mouthed as she strokes the wolf’s back. Her mother holds her other hand, as she walks back clutching a loaf of bread and other provisions (detail below).

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Luc-Olivier Merson (1846–1920), The Wolf of Agubbio (detail) (1877), oil on canvas, 88 x 133 cm, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille, Lille, France. Image by Chatsam, via Wikimedia Commons.
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Johannes Vermeer (1632–1675), The Milkmaid (c 1658-59), oil on canvas, 45.5 x 41 cm, The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Wikimedia Commons.

Vermeer’s Milkmaid, probably from about 1658-59, is less about milk than the bread on the tabletop. A wicker basket of bread is nearest the viewer, broken and smaller pieces of different types of bread behind and towards the woman, in the centre. These are shown in the detail below, where Vermeer’s controlled use of blurring is visible.

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Johannes Vermeer (1632–1675), The Milkmaid (detail) (c 1658-59), oil on canvas, 45.5 x 41 cm, The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Wikimedia Commons.

Perhaps because it was so commonplace in many households and bakers, there are relatively few paintings showing the making and baking of bread.

Anders Zorn, Baking Bread (1889), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Private collection. WikiArt.
Anders Zorn (1860–1920), Baking Bread (1889), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Private collection. WikiArt.

In Baking Bread, painted in Mora, the artist’s home town in Sweden in 1889, Anders Zorn captures each step in the process in documentary fashion, from kneading the dough, through rolling and preparing it, to its baking. There’s even an infant in the foreground who looks ready to be its consumer.

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Helen Allingham (1848-1926), Baking Bread (date not known), watercolour, further details not known. The Athenaeum.

Helen Allingham’s undated Baking Bread shows a traditional farmhouse baking oven being used to bake the bread for an extended family, or possibly a small village shop. These ovens can still be found in many remaining period dwellings, but are now seldom used.

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Christian Krohg (1852–1925), Woman Cutting Bread (1879), oil on canvas, 80 x 60 cm, Bergen kunstmuseum, Bergen, Norway. Wikimedia Commons.

Christian Krohg’s early painting of Ane Gaihede as a Woman Cutting Bread (1879) marked the start of his social realism. Krohg documents her in almost ethnographic detachment. She is aligned in profile, against an almost bare wall, perfectly framed at three-quarter length.

Finally, bread is occasionally featured in still life paintings.

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Anne Vallayer-Coster (1744–1818), A Still Life of Mackerel, Glassware, a Loaf of Bread and Lemons on a Table with a White Cloth (1787), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Anne Vallayer-Coster painted A Still Life of Mackerel, Glassware, a Loaf of Bread and Lemons on a Table with a White Cloth in 1787, when she was at her artistic zenith.

Medium and Message: Sticks and crayons

Professional artists have long used brushes to apply paint in their finished work, and many used hand-held sticks of pigment only when sketching in preparation. Charcoal has been widely used, with metal wire in silverpoint an alternative. In the sixteenth century, large deposits of graphite were discovered in Cumbria, England, following which graphite sticks and sheathed pencils became enormously popular among both amateurs and professionals.

Although it’s impossible to make any clear distinction between drawing and painting, those stick-based media are simple compared with oil paints, and seldom used in works comparable in their aims or sophistication to professional oil or watercolour painting.

The first changes in practice resulted from the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars at the turn of the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries. Graphite was a strategic product, as it was used as a refractory in the manufacture of cannonballs, and supplies to France all but dried up. In 1795 Nicolas-Jacques Conté used a mixture of clay, graphite and other pigments to form sticks similar to pastels but significantly harder, referred to as hard pastels or Conté crayons.

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Jean-François Millet (1814-1875), The Cat at the Window (c 1857-58), conté crayon and pastel with stumping and blending, fixed on wove paper, 49.8 × 39.4 cm, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA. Courtesy of The J. Paul Getty Museum.

As with charcoal and graphite sticks and pencils, Conté crayons were first used for preparatory sketching. By the middle of the nineteenth century, artists like Jean-François Millet extended their use into pastel paintings including his enchanting and mysterious The Cat at the Window from about 1857-58. Because of their hardness, Conté crayons were more amenable to sharpening, so could make finer lines and a richer range of marks.

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Jean-François Millet (1814–1875), The Sower (1865-66), pastel and crayon on beige wove paper mounted on board (Conté crayon, wood-pulp board), 47.1 × 37.5 cm, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA. Wikimedia Commons.

Millet’s most famous painting in pastel and Conté crayon is this 1865-66 version of The Sower, a motif that was to recur in the hands of others for the rest of the century, and works perfectly in what were still relatively unconventional media.

Conté crayons, like pencil, charcoal and pastels, rely on mechanical adhesion rather than any polymerising binder. Specialised papers with roughened surfaces were marketed to improve their adhesion, but they share similar problems of longevity. However, at a time when mark-making was becoming popular, the wide range of effects available from sticks of pigment was an attraction: not only could the artist place bold strokes of colour over stumped-smooth areas, but they could also paint on textured grounds to great effect.

Georges Seurat, Embroidery (1882-3), Conté crayon on Michallet paper, 31.2 x 24.1 cm, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. WikiArt.
Georges Seurat (1859-1891), Embroidery (1882-3), Conté crayon on Michallet paper, 31.2 x 24.1 cm, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. WikiArt.

One of the masters of the Conté crayon was the Divisionist Georges Seurat, who used textured papers to give his paintings or drawings a highly granular appearance, as if they were photographs.

The rise of industrial chemistry and manufacturing industries in the nineteenth century brought other new painting sticks. Wax crayons effectively functioned as a low-temperature encaustic, and became popular in schools. They were adopted for resist techniques in watercolours, notably by John Singer Sargent, and some artists started using them in combination with other media.

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Félicien Rops (1833-1898), Hamadryad (c 1885), gouache, watercolour, ink wash, crayon, pen and ink, grattage, dimensions not known, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal, Canada. Image by Daderot, via Wikimedia Commons.

Félicien Rops’ painting of a Hamadryad from about 1885 uses a wide range of media, drawn from those already popular among the illustrators of the day.

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Odilon Redon (1840–1916), Sîta (c 1893), pastel, with touches of black Conté crayon, over various charcoals, on cream wove paper altered to a golden tone, 53.6 × 37.7 cm, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Image by Rlbberlin, via Wikimedia Commons.

Another enthusiast for mixed stick media was Odilon Redon, for instance in his painting of Sîta from about 1893.

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Jean-François Raffaëlli (1850-1924), Parisian Rag Pickers (c 1890), oil and oil crayon on board set into cradled panel, 32.7 × 27 cm, Brooklyn Museum, New York, NY. Wikimedia Commons.

Although the mainstream Impressionists largely kept to oil on canvas, those on the periphery including Jean-François Raffaëlli were more experimental in their choice of media: his Parisian Rag Pickers from about 1890 was made using a mixture of oil paints and oil crayons.

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Egon Schiele (1890–1918), Krumau Town Crescent (Small Town V) (1915), black crayon, gouache and oil on canvas, 109.7 x 140 cm, Israel Museum מוזיאון ישראל, Jerusalem, Israel. Wikimedia Commons.

The new generation of painters who started their careers in the early twentieth century used stick media increasingly. Egon Schiele was a prolific draftsman who used drawing techniques extensively in his painting. This work showing Krumau Town Crescent (Small Town V) (1915) is based on a drawing he had made the previous year, and uses the unusual combination of black crayon, gouache and oils.

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Egon Schiele (1890–1918), Portrait of the Artist’s Wife Seated, Holding Her Right Leg (1917), black crayon and gouache, 463 x 292 cm, The Morgan Library & Museum, New York, NY. Wikimedia Commons.

For this Portrait of the Artist’s Wife Seated, Holding Her Right Leg, Schiele used just black crayon and gouache.

Paul Signac, Antibes (1917), watercolour and crayon, 29.85 x 45.1 cm, Private collection. WikiArt.
Paul Signac (1863-1935), Antibes (1917), watercolour and crayon, 29.85 x 45.1 cm, Private collection. WikiArt.

Some of the older generation joined in with unusual combinations of media. Late in his life, the former Divisionist Paul Signac painted many brilliantly coloured views of the south of France using combinations of watercolour and crayons, such as Antibes (1917) above, and The Old Port of Marseilles (1931) below.

Paul Signac, The Old Port of Marseilles (1931), watercolour and crayon, Musée Albert André, Bagnols-sur-Cèze, France. WikiArt, Wikimedia Commons.
Paul Signac (1863-1935), The Old Port of Marseilles (1931), watercolour and crayon, Musée Albert André, Bagnols-sur-Cèze, France. WikiArt, Wikimedia Commons.
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Joseph Stella (1877–1946), Kathleen Millay (c 1923-24), crayon and metalpoint on paper, 71.1 x 55.9 cm, Cheekwood Museum of Art, Nashville, TN. The Athenaeum.

On the other side of the Atlantic, also late in his career, Joseph Stella developed a novel drawing technique combining traditional metalpoint with modern crayons, which he used in his intimate portrait of Kathleen Millay from about 1923-24, above, and Eggplant, one of his last works, completed in 1944, below.

Metalpoint uses fine metal wire, most commonly silver, mounted in a holder, and is a slow and meticulous method of drawing or painting; its marks on paper are only faint to begin with, but they darken slowly as the fine tracks of silver tarnish.

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Joseph Stella (1877–1946), Eggplant (1944), crayon and silverpoint on paper, 53.3 x 42.9 cm, Private collection. Wikimedia Commons.
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Pierre Bonnard (1867-1947), The Bath (1942), gouache, pastel and colored crayon on paper, 50.2 x 65.4 cm, Private collection. The Athenaeum.

Late in his career, Pierre Bonnard incorporated stick media in some of his paintings. The richly textured marks in this painting of his wife Marthe in The Bath from 1942 are strokes of coloured crayon, worked over gouache and pastels.

Three Rooms 1937 by Paul Nash 1889-1946
Paul Nash (1892–1946), Three Rooms (1937), graphite, crayon and watercolour on paper, 39.2 x 29.7 cm, The Tate Gallery (Purchased 1981), London. © The Tate Gallery and Photographic Rights © Tate (2016), CC-BY-NC-ND 3.0 (Unported), http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/nash-three-rooms-t03205

Paul Nash added both graphite and crayon marks to his 1937 watercolour of Three Rooms, a painting with strong graphic elements.

In the nineteen-twenties and -thirties, several art suppliers developed new types of crayon, using proper binders intended to allow more extensive effects and working, greater versatility, and improved longevity. These mixed conventional pigments with a bewildering array of waxes, oils and other substances, including:

  • waxes and gums, to make crayons (sheathed in paper) and pencils (in wood);
  • waxes, to make grease pencils;
  • waxes and oils, to make lithographic crayons;
  • mineral wax (paraffin), to make wax crayons;
  • synthetic wax (polyethylene), to make water-dispersible wax crayons, such as Caran d’Ache Neocolor crayons;
  • waxes and non-drying oils, to make oil pastels;
  • waxes and drying oils, to make oil sticks and oil bars, that can form polymerised paint layers similar to conventional oil paints.

Their physical properties, determined by the binders used, in turn determine how they can be applied, appropriate grounds, fragility of the stick and its suitability for sharpening, whether diluents are organic solvents or water, and the depth and robustness of the resulting paint layer.

Unfortunately, even reputable manufacturers seem reluctant to provide detailed information on the lightfastness of pigments used, and to achieve high chroma level in attractive colours they often resort to pigments known to be fugitive on exposure to light. During the twentieth century in particular, this resulted in many fine paintings being made using media that rapidly became a conservation nightmare, either because the paint film has proved unstable, or their initially brilliant colours have faded rapidly.

Some types of media, in particular coloured pencils, have been vulnerable to irresponsible suppliers and artists who have put blind faith in products that have proved ephemeral. Sadly, few artists have obeyed the exhortation for the buyer to beware, and assessed the permanence of the media they have used in paintings which have been sold for large sums.

Among the most recent, and still unproven, media are oil pastels, which work into creamy layers, and undergo only limited hardening because they don’t incorporate drying oils like linseed or walnut. Their origins are controversial: first developed in Japan, and slightly later in Europe, it’s claimed that Pablo Picasso preferred them.

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Robert Clark Templeton (1929–1991), Sketch of an Overview of the Courtroom (1971), tan oil pastels on paper, 35.7 x 28.0 cm, Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, CT. Wikimedia Commons.

Oil pastels have certainly shown themselves capable in some unusual circumstances, such as Robert Clark Templeton’s court paintings, including his Sketch of an Overview of the Courtroom from 1971. Few courts would have even considered him using watercolours, for example, and for this case he chose modern and unobtrusive oil pastels. This sketch has been executed briskly, with effective use of gestures and marks.

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Robert Clark Templeton (1929–1991), Drawing for CBS Evening News of Bobby G. Seale and others (1971), oil pastels on paper, 24.6 x 20.3 cm, Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, CT. Wikimedia Commons.

Once a sketch has been laid down in oil pastels, it’s quick to work that up into a more detailed portrait like Templeton’s Drawing for CBS Evening News of Bobby G. Seale and others (1971).

Copyright restrictions prevent me from showing examples of stick media in the hands of modern artists, but I conclude by showing a couple of my own amateur efforts.

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Howard Oakley (b 1954), Villard Reculas (2008), Sennelier oil pastels on Daler Rowney Ingres pastel paper, 22.9 x 30.5 cm, private collection. EHN & DIJ Oakley.

This Alpine landscape was painted in the studio using Sennelier oil pastels on Daler Rowney Ingres pastel paper.

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Howard Oakley (b 1954), Pont Royal, Paris (2010), Caran d’Ache Neocolor crayons on paper, 26 x 36 cm, private collection. EHN & DIJ Oakley.

This dawn view of the Pont Royal in the centre of Paris was painted with Caran d’Ache water-dispersible Neocolor crayons on paper. This uses base washes brought out from an initial dry crayon sketch, with superimposed texturing using dry crayon – something hard to achieve in watercolour.

Modern stick-based media look alluring, and are persuasively marketed by their vendors. However, those are seldom the traditional art materials suppliers that they might seem: most have been bought up by large companies that are primarily driven by increasing sales revenues, and may have little understanding of the requirements and problems of painting media.

Modern vendors are often secretive over the composition of their products, and although good standards exist for lightfastness, few publish data for their product ranges. Finally, their advantages in the making of art are often marred by the need to protect these paintings under glass.

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